The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Understand­ing how our immune system works during the mild vs. severe forms of COVID-19 is important to the process of developing targeted vaccines.

- By Prakash Nagarkatti and Mitzi Nagarkatti

With yet another COVID-19 booster available for vulnerable population­s in the U.S., many people find themselves wondering what the end game will be.

The MRNA vaccines currently used in the U.S. against COVID-19 have been highly successful at preventing hospitaliz­ation and death. The Commonweal­th Fund recently reported that in the U.S. alone, the vaccines have prevented more than 2 million people from dying and more than 17 million from hospitaliz­ation.

However, the vaccines have failed to provide longterm protective immunity to prevent breakthrou­gh infections — cases that occur in people who are fully vaccinated. Because of this, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently endorsed a second booster shot for individual­s 50 and older and people who are immunocomp­romised.

However, it has become increasing­ly clear that the second booster does not provide long-lasting protection against breakthrou­gh infections. As a result, it will be necessary to retool the existing vaccines to increase the duration of protection in order to help bring the pandemic to an end.

As immunologi­sts studying immune response to infections and other threats, we are trying to better understand the vaccine booster-induced immunity against COVID-19.

Longer-term immunity

Why are MRNA vaccines so successful in preventing the serious form of COVID19 but not so great at protecting against breakthrou­gh infections? Understand­ing this concept is critical for stopping new infections and controllin­g the pandemic.

COVID-19 infection is unique in that the majority of people who get it recover with mild to moderate symptoms, while a small percentage get the severe disease that can lead to hospitaliz­ation and death. Understand­ing how our immune system works during the mild vs. severe forms of COVID-19 is also important to the process of developing more-targeted vaccines.

When people are first exposed to SARS-COV-2 — the virus that causes COVID-19 — or to a vaccine against COVID-19, the immune system activates two key types of immune cells, called B and T cells. The B cells produce Y-shaped protein molecules called antibodies. The antibodies bind to the protruding spike protein on the surface of the virus. This blocks the virus from entering a cell and ultimately prevents it from causing an infection.

However, if not enough antibodies are produced, the virus can escape and infect the host cells. When this happens, the immune system activates what are known as killer T cells. These can recognize virus-infected cells immediatel­y after infection and destroy them, thereby preventing the virus from replicatin­g and causing widespread infection.

Thus, there is increasing evidence that antibodies may help prevent breakthrou­gh infections while the killer T cells provide protection against the severe form of the disease.

Why booster shots?

The B cells and T cells are unique in that after they mount an initial immune response, they get converted into memory cells. Unlike antibodies, memory cells can stay in a person’s body for several decades and can mount a rapid response when they encounter the same infectious agent. It is because of such memory cells that some vaccines against diseases such as smallpox provide protection for decades.

But with certain vaccines, such as hepatitis, it is necessary to give multiple doses of a vaccine to boost the immune response. This is because the first or second dose is not sufficient to induce robust antibodies or to sustain the memory B and T cell response.

While the third dose — or first booster — of COVID-19 vaccines was highly effective in preventing the severe form of the disease, the protection afforded against infection lasted only four to six months.

That diminished protection even after the third dose is what led the CDC to endorse the fourth shot of COVID-19 vaccine — called the second booster — for people who are immunocomp­romised and those 50 and older.

However, a recent preliminar­y study from Israel that has not yet been peer-reviewed showed that the second booster did not further boost the immune response but merely restored the waning immune response seen during the third dose. Also, the second booster provided little extra protection against COVID-19 when compared to the initial three doses.

So while the second booster certainly provides a small benefit to the most vulnerable people by extending immune protection by a few months, there has been considerab­le confusion over what the availabil

ity of the fourth shot means for the general population.

Immune ‘exhaustion’

In addition to the inability of the current COVID-19 vaccines to provide long-term immunity, some researcher­s believe that frequent or constant exposure to foreign molecules found in an infectious agent may cause immune “exhaustion.” In those cases, because the T cells “see” the foreign molecules all the time, they can get worn down and fail to rid the body of the cancer or HIV.

Evidence also suggests that in severe cases of COVID-19, the killer T cells may be exhibiting immune exhaustion and therefore be unable to mount a strong immune response. Whether repeated vaccine boosters can cause similar T cell exhaustion is a possibilit­y that needs further study.

Another reason why the MRNA vaccines have failed to induce sustained antibody and memory response may be related to ingredient­s called adjuvants. Traditiona­l vaccines such as those for diphtheria and tetanus use adjuvants to boost the immune response. These are compounds that activate the innate immunity that consists of cells known as macrophage­s.

These are specialize­d cells that help the T cells and B cells, ultimately inducing a stronger antibody response.

Because mrna-based vaccines are relatively new, they do not include the traditiona­l adjuvants. The current MRNA vaccines used in the U.S. rely on small balls of fat called lipid nanopartic­les to deliver the MRNA. Precisely how these molecules affect the long-term immune response remains to be seen. And whether the current COVID-19 vaccines’ failure to trigger strong long-lived antibody response is related to the adjuvants remains to be explored.

While the current vaccines are highly effective in preventing severe disease, the next phase of vaccine developmen­t will need to focus on how to trigger a long-lived antibody response that would last for at least a year, making it likely that COVID-19 vaccines will become an annual shot.

Prakash Nagarkatti and Mitzi Nagarkatti are professors of pathology, microbiolo­gy and immunology at the University of South Carolina. This piece originally appeared in The Conversati­on, a nonprofit news source dedicated to unlocking ideas from academia for the public.

 ?? AP FILE ?? The current COVID-19 vaccines, including those produced by Moderna (left) and Pfizer, have been highly effective at preventing severe diseases, but the next phase of vaccine developmen­t will need to focus on how to trigger a long-lived antibody response.
AP FILE The current COVID-19 vaccines, including those produced by Moderna (left) and Pfizer, have been highly effective at preventing severe diseases, but the next phase of vaccine developmen­t will need to focus on how to trigger a long-lived antibody response.
 ?? ?? Mitzi Nagarkatti
Mitzi Nagarkatti
 ?? ?? Prakash Nagarkatti
Prakash Nagarkatti

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